“Brotherhood of the Travelling Shorts” by Jeff Baker. Friday Flash Fics for May 3rd, 2019 (posted May 4th!)

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The Brotherhood of the Travelling Shorts

By Jeff Baker

 

Stephen and Roy spent the summer on the beach, in a rented bungalow that dated back to the 1940s. They spent their evenings together but when Roy holed himself up with his computer for “my daily telecommute,” Stephen wandered out to walk along the beach, slowly with his cane, checking out the guys in their beach bodies, the hunk doing somersaults, the guys tanning. Stephen sighed and imagined that they were all staring at the 20-something with the bad leg. “Withered,” some people called it. At least he could get around. And at least he’d found Roy.

He sighed and looked up the beach. There was a lopsided, one-story building near a large rock formation; maybe he could grab a snack there. It didn’t look crowded. Stephen didn’t like crowds. He gave a backward glance at the guy doing somersaults and then walked determinedly up the beach.

The sign on the building was cracked and worn away, but there were lights in the windows and an OPEN sign in one of them. Stephen pushed open the door and found himself in a well-lit jumble of glass cases, surfboards, and beachwear with snack foods in a cooler. Stephen looked around. He sniffed the air; the room smelled more like the sea than the beach did.

Nobody else seemed to be there.

“Hullo,” Stephen said. “Um, anybody here?”

“Just a minute! I’m coming, I’m coming!” The voice was deep and Stephen looked around again and then saw a man in a Hawaiian shirt and glasses with a bald head surrounded by a frizz of white hair. He was rushing towards the counter that had a cash register on it and was only about four feet tall.

“Gotta hire somebody or at least lock up when I have to use the…ah! Can I interest you in a surfboard?”

Stephen tried not to grin, and thumped his cane. “I doubt I’m the surfboarding type.”

“Never can tell!” the man said. “I was a champion surer back in the day!” He grinned broadly. “Then I got married and my wife said she’d kill me if I ever got on a board again. And said then she’d divorce me!”

They both laughed.

“So, I got this place, and we’ve been living happily ever after. Oh, I’m Mr. Bertanzetti. You’re not living happily ever after I see.”

“Uh, yeah, well most of the time, but…” Stephen began.

Behind the counter, Mr. Bertanzetti eyed him up and down.

“I have just the thing.” He ducked behind the counter. Stephen imagined he’d been sitting on a tall stool. A moment later, he walked from behind the counter and handed Stephen what looked like a flowered handkerchief. “Try these on.”

Stephen examined what he’d been handed; a pair of flowered silken shorts. Bright yellow flowers, hint of green or red stems with a black background

“John Marvel himself used to wear those when he took his board out,” Bertanzetti said pointing at a picture on the wall of a young, muscular, tanned man holding a surfboard. “Try them on!”

Stephen stared at the shorts and wrinkled his nose.

“They’ve been washed. Try them on.” Mr. Bertanzetti gestured at a door labeled Dressing Room, half-obscured by some boxes. Stephen shrugged and walked over to the dressing room, looking up at the railing in front of the stairway leading to the upper floor and another door.

The dressing room was about the size of a handicapped men’s room stall. Stephen sat down, worked his way out of his jeans and tried on the shorts. They were comfortable, a nice fit. He tried to guess how old they were; there was no label. He stood up, bracing himself against a wall and looked in the full-length mirror on the back of the door.

And stared.

Staring back at him, wearing the shorts and his shirt was a tall, muscular, figure. Tanned, blond hair, nice teeth. Stephen closed his eyes and shook his head. He opened them again and touched the mirror. The hunk had reached out a hand; it was definitely his reflection. He pulled up the front of his shirt. Washboard abs. He flexed his leg muscles; both legs worked. He grabbed his cane and pants and shoes and walked out of the dressing room.

Mr. Bertanzetti looked up from the counter where he was reading a magazine.

“You can leave the cane and pants here,” he said. “Pick ‘em up later.”

Stephen managed a “thanks” and left the cane propped against a wall, the pants on top of it. Then he walked out towards the beach.

The sun was bright and warm, the breeze was cool and Stephen ran through the surf, laughing. When he reached the crowd of people he’d seen before he let out a whoop and did a handstand. The people on the beach all applauded. He took a bow and then posed like a bodybuilder, with a mock-serious look on his face. They were looking at him, some with admiration, some with envy. He recognized one of the people at the edge of the small crowd that had gathered around. Roy, standing there, scanning the crowd. Stephen grinned and made his way over to Roy.

“Looking for someone?” Stephen asked, in the voice of a tanned, buff surfer guy.

“Yeah,” Roy said.

“Maybe it’s me.” Stephen said grinning.

Roy glanced at him. “I don’t think so,” he said. Then he walked off.

He didn’t recognize me, Stephen thought. My husband didn’t recognize me. Because I’m not me. He tugged at the shorts, then he grinned again as he turned and walked back to the little shop on the beach.

It took Stephen longer to walk back from the shop to the house, but he was in no hurry. He paused, planted his cane in the sand and took a deep breath of the sea air. The paper bag had the snacks he’d bought after he’d returned the shorts to Mr. Bertanzetti and put on his own clothes. He figured if Roy had been taking a break, he could use a snack.

“Hey Stephen!”

Stephen looked up. Roy was sitting on the low stone wall in front of their house.

“Hey!” Stephen said, as he headed up the path to the house. He held up the bag. “I got us some munchies.”

Roy grinned and kissed him.

“You’re the only snack I need!”

 

—end—

 

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Short-Story Month, Day Two: or Travelling With the Silver Balladeer

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by Jeff Baker

For Day #2 of short-story month, here are some single-author collections I’ve enjoyed.

First off, I read most of these stories originally in anthologies with other author’s stories. Starting with Manly Wade Wellman, one of the best writers ever of short fantasy and horror. My favorite of his collections is the posthumous “The Valley So Low.” It includes stories about John the Balladeer, also called “Silver John,” because of the silver strings on his guitar, a protection against supernatural evil. Replete with folklore; the stories are fine and spooky and an unconscious influence on my recent stories about the wandering Bryce Going. Wellman’s stories about John were collected as “John the Balladeer” about 40 years ago, there has been a complete edition since then. Well worth reading.

The latest collection I’ve read is William F. Wu’s “A Temple of Forgotten Spirits.” Wu says it’s actually a novel, but much of it was first published as short-stories. It follows Jack Hong as he pursues a fabled Chinese unicorn with plenty of information about Chinese history and what it has been like being Chinese-American through the last two centuries.

When I started writing LGBT-themed fiction, I read as much of it as I could (short-stories, I mean.) Among the best is the fine writer/editor Steve Berman. His collections “Trysts” and “Second Thoughts” are from Lethe Press and include several stories set in Berman’s “Fallen Area.” A collection of those stories would be a fine read. Berman’s non fallen-area stories include “Caught By Skin,” which has always reminded me of Charles Beaumont.

Posted in LGBT, Manly Wade Wellman, Short-Stories, Short-Story Month, Steve Berman, Uncategorized, William F. Wu | 1 Comment

For Short-Story Month: A Hand and a tale of Gifts.

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By Jeff Baker

 

May is short-story month and ‘Nathan Burgoine  is celebrating with a monthlong series of posts about short-stories, and inviting others to play along. I couldn’t resist!

My first short-story (the one that made a big impact on me anyway) that I read, dates back to Grade School, maybe about 1971. I’d actually read some novels, the Arabian Nights and a lot of comic books. But one day, in a book of ghost stories I stumbled on a short-story called “The Brown Hand.” Based on an old legend from India, it involves a man trying to end a haunting at his Uncle’s estate. The Uncle was a surgeon in India and he amputated the hand of a Lascar who believed he could not rest unless he was buried with his hand. The Uncle moved back to England and the preserved hand was lost in a fire.

Then the Lascar’s ghost showed up. Every night.

For years I thought the story was by Rudyard Kipling, as it has Kipling’s hallmarks: India, the British officer, a clash of cultures and a superstition being real. Instead, the story was by Arthur Conan Doyle. (It is readily available, and I recommend any of Doyle’s supernatural stories.) To this day when I notice where the square of moonlight from the window has moved when I’ve been asleep, I think of this story.

And a word here for Robert Louis Stevenson’s “The Bottle Imp” which I may have read earlier (I know I’d read “The Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,” which is a novel or novella, but they didn’t stick with me the way “The Brown Hand” has!)

My first published story (two really!) was a flash-fiction piece which appeared in the 1999 anthology “The World’s Shortest Stories of Love and Death,” which features short-stories 55 words or less. One (“Fifty-Five”) was co-written with the late John R. Bogner. The other (“Oh, Henry!”) was expanded a bit by the editors. Here’s the original version:

Oh, Henry, by Jeff Baker

He had a sudden thought: “Her hair will grow back, but my watch is gone!” Outside, the cold snow fell.

The End.

John and I were paid in copies for our stories and we couldn’t have been more thrilled. (We shared the contents page with Norman Lear, Larry Niven and Charles M. Schultz, that’s still cool!!) I had a story read over the radio Halloween Night of 2001, but the next nine years were filled with rejection slips but I was writing and learning by writing and I started publishing (about one story a year) in 2010.

Posted in 'Nathan Burgoine, Arthur Conan Doyle, Robert Louis Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, Short-Stories, Short-Story Month, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

“The Milk Grotto.” Walk into the dark in Friday Flash Fics, by Jeff Baker.

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The Milk Grotto

By Jeff Baker

 

The police were after me.

I’d been in the city three weeks and I was pretty sure I was innocent of anything, but if they really checked they’d find out that my name wasn’t really Bryce Going and I was a runaway from New York City and I’d been working my way across the country for about a year. And they’d find out that I’d only just turned seventeen, making me pretty much legal but I was still a runaway and I didn’t want to spend any time in a youth center. That was why I’d run away after my Mom split. Teenage gay runaways didn’t do too well in those places in 1978. The police had come into the place I was working and started asking questions about the employees. For all the above reasons I’d ducked out the back door, cut across the parking lot, jumped the fence and run over to the old stadium that was largely vacant since the city lost the arena football team.

I looked around quickly for security and then ran down the stairs labeled “Exit,” climbed over the gate that had been set up and found myself in the dim back hallways of the stadium. I saw a door labeled “Basement,” and I ducked inside. There had been a couple of lights on upstairs but the basement was pitch-black; a good place to hide if anyone came looking for me. And I knew the electricity worked but I wasn’t going to fumble for any light switch yet.

I felt my way carefully down the stairs and stayed still, listening for any sounds from upstairs. Instead, I heard a rustling in the room with me. I stayed in the middle of the stairway, unwilling to walk into a basement of scurrying rats.

“Company,” a voice said.

“Don’t turn the lights on yet,” said another.

I heard a scuttling on the stairs behind me and I groped for the lights. After a moment I found the switch and the lights turned on. When my eyes adjusted to the light I realized this wasn’t the huge stadium basement I’d imagined in the dark; just a medium-sized storeroom lit by a bare bulb. Probably not the only storeroom or basement. I took that in in an instant as my major concern was the three men I saw standing at the bottom of the stairs, all wearing grey sweatpants and sweatshirts.

“We’re not going hurt you,” came a voice from behind me. I almost jumped down the stairs.

“We saw you running from next door,” one of the men said.

“We figured you were trapped,” said the other.

“Cornered,” said the third man.

“We unlocked the doors. Locked them again. Anyone comes in; they’ll think this door has been locked for years,” said the man behind me.

“Look, where did you…” I started. Then one of the men put his finger to his lips.

“Shhhhh,” he said. “People. Upstairs. Lights.”

The man at the top of the stairs turned off the lights. I thought I heard someone upstairs. I didn’t make a sound. I hard rats squeaking in the storeroom. I wanted to run. I would have counted the seconds except I had no place to be at any time. After a while, I couldn’t hear anything from upstairs, just the rats downstairs. I waited a while longer. I was sweating. Then, the rats suddenly stopped squeaking.

“They’re gone,” said one of the men.

“We can tell,” said another.

“Our hearing is better than yours,” said the third.

“You can stay here for a while,” said the fourth.

I let out a deep breath. “I’d better be going,” I said. “Thanks. You guys got a place to stay?”

“We stay here,” one of them said.

“We like the dark,” said another.

“And the nearby dumpsters are kept full,” said the third.

“Yeah,” I said. “Thanks again.” I cautiously opened the door and made my way back outside into the evening air. Luckily I had been keeping my money in my shoe. I would catch a bus out of town, no sense trying to settle down in this city. I realized I’d seen a lot of strange things as I glanced back at the closed stadium, imagining the four men in grey in their storeroom, as they dwindled down to smaller shapes, the grey clothing becoming grey hair covering them entirely, their voices becoming the squeaking in the communal dark.

 

 

—end—

 

AUTHOR’S NOTE: “The Milk Grotto” is a reference to a legend connected with the Biblical “Flight Into Egypt.” Most of my other stories about Bryce Going have titles using that imagery “The Miracle of the Palm Tree,” “The Way of the Sea,” and the aforementioned “The Flight Into Egypt.” “Riding the Rails” from a few weeks ago didn’t fit the pattern; I couldn’t find a reference to the Holy Family riding a train. And one of the cool things about this flash fiction gig is that I found I like writing series stories!—jsb

 

Posted in Bryce Going, Fantasy, Fiction, Friday Flash Fics, LGBT, Short-Stories, Uncategorized | 3 Comments

Beware of the Dragon, Friday Flash Fiction by Jeff Baker, April 19, 2019

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Doorway of the Dragon

By Jeff Baker

I always had a thing for Asian guys. So when I met Alex at the sandwich bar, young, muscular and rocking out a tee-shirt, I started talking to him. Soon we were walking down the streets and he was showing me San Francisco.

“Yeah, most people don’t see the big opportunities here,” he was saying. “All I need is the cash for a start-up. Maybe we could talk about that after we get to my apartment?”

The day was clear, bright and not too warm. I grinned and said “Sure.”

“Take that door over there,” Alex said pointing at a house with an ornate metal dragon on the door. “Nobody would do that if they weren’t the kind of individualist who understands the value of an opportunity.”

I nodded and stared at the dragon. It was as tall as the door and looked as if it was going to crawl up the door to the roof. Alex was rambling on about money and opportunity.

Then, I heard a scream. Alex was lying on the ground, staring upward, terrified.

“No! NO! Get away from me! Get off of me! Help!”

I stared. There was nothing there, just Alex on his back on the sidewalk.

“Help!” Alex yelled. “Get it off me! Don’t you see it? Don’t you…” Alex stopped. He stared at something right above his head as if he was listening to something. “No, no! Never! I won’t…I mean, yes! Yes!” He looked over at me in a barely-controlled panic. “All right, all right! I’m not Alex Wu, my name’s Jason Wong. I’m after that money your Aunt left you. I’ve been following you for two days.” He looked up into thin air again. “I pulled that job last month. Bilked an old lady out of twenty grand. Call the police. It says you have to call the police.”

“It?” I said, backing away.

“It,” Alex/Jason said. “The dragon that crawled off the door! Don’t you see it? Can’t you hear it?”

I took a few more steps away and glanced at the door. The metal dragon was still on the door. I pulled out my phone and called the police. While I was waiting for them to answer I glanced at Alex/Jason again. On the dirt next to the pavement where he was pinned by the imaginary dragon I saw a footprint suddenly form. A three toed footprint, like from a big lizard or a…a…

Someone answered the phone. I told the police all about Jason. They said they’d be right there. I hung up and then did a quick search about dragons. Among the things the article said was that dragons are guardians of treasure.

 

—end—

 

I must credit ‘Nathan Burgoine for the fine picture taken in San Francisco. ——-j.

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“Riding the Rails.” Friday Flash Fics by Jeff Baker, April 13, 2019.

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Riding the Rails

By Jeff Baker

 

I’d ducked into the freight car thinking the train was headed west. By the time I realized we were heading north there was no way to jump off. But I was seventeen that year and had nowhere else to go. We, meant me and the older man I found hiding behind a row of boxes in the train car.

“You really shouldn’t be here, kid,” the man said. His clothes looked shabby, including his jacket and worn shoes. His felt hat looked like he’d slept on it.

“I know,” I said. “I hadn’t expected to be on the road. But my parents split and I didn’t want to be sent off to a boy’s home, so I hit the road. I’ve been on the road for about a year. I turned eighteen last summer.” Except for the reason I cut out most of that was a lie.

“George Peters,” the man said, not extending his hand.

“Bryce Going,” I said. That was a lie too but I was protecting myself.

“I know how you must feel, kid,” Peters said. “I was about sixteen in the early thirties when my folks lost everything they had and I spent the Depression bumming across the country, riding the rails, working to earn my keep and some food along the way. Keeping an eye out for bulls when I hopped a freight. Learning to read the symbols we riders would carve in people’s fences, learning which ones were warnings. It could be rough, but there were moments I wouldn’t have traded. Riding on top of one of these cars as it stretched and travelled across the country with the sun setting.” He shook his head and smiled.

So far, I didn’t have any memories like that. The last year or so had been hectic and unpleasant. I had no problem with running away across the country but I still wasn’t sure what I was going to do when I got there. Wherever there was. I had planned just to go west, maybe to L.A. but I did not have any specific plan. I probably should have. Or maybe I should just stop the wandering.

“Where’s this train going anyway?” I asked.

“I think up to Canada,” George said. “It depends on its mood.”

“Okay,” I said. I’d learned not to push when someone started sounding a little crazy.

We rode on for several more hours, hiding behind the boxes when the train stopped, so, as George put it, “the bulls” wouldn’t find us and throw us off the train. Or worse. It was past ten in the evening by my watch when George said that since the train wouldn’t stop until next morning I should try getting some sleep. I sat down in a corner with one hand on the knife I carried with me. I was taking no chances.

Light shined in my face, waking me. I saw blue sky, felt hard ground and saw a man standing over me. I about jumped up. But I realized I was caught, wherever I was.

“Hold on there fella,” the man said. He must have noticed me tensing up. I was tense, I didn’t know where I was—had I fallen off the train?

“Mind telling me where I am?” I asked cautiously.

“You’re just outside Hawkes, Wisconsin,” the man said. “Mind telling me how you got here?”

I didn’t seem to be hurt. I rubbed my head and decided to come clean.

“I think I got thrown off a train,” I said.

“Train?” the man said. “There’s no train around here, not since they built the airport over in Deadstone.”

“What?” I managed to say. “I got on a train about, well down in Missouri.” I was trying to remember my geography.

“No railroad line has run up through here in almost twenty years,” the man said. “Look for yourself.” He pointed over to where I could see what looked like an old depot building. I could see peeling paint and shattered windows and a caved-in roof. “Storm got the building; they had no reason to repair it.”

I got up and walked over to the building. What caught my attention were the railroad tracks, or what was left of them. They were overgrown with weeds in front of the depot but they trailed off into nothing a few yards away where they had been removed.

“There’s talk of putting in a highway where the tracks were,” the man said, “but for now there’s a bus that comes by once a week.”

I kept staring at the overgrown tracks, and thinking of George. I almost imagined I could hear a train whistle.

 

—end—

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“A Gentleman Dapper…” Friday Flash Fics for April 5, 2019 by Jeff Baker.

Had a bit of trouble posting the picture prompt; Suffice to say it was a shot of a woman in a red outfit with a red hat topped by a red rose. So, I put my author photo up.013 

A Gentleman Dapper Stepped Out Of The Phone Booth

By Jeff Baker

 

I knew the Lady in Red was trouble when she stepped into my office. Ladies in red are usually in trouble when they go see a private eye.

“I need your help,” she said. “My husband is cheating on me.”

“You want me to follow him or something?” I asked. “I really don’t do that sort of thing.”

“It’s more than that,” she said. “My husband is dead. Or, he’s supposed to be dead. He faked his own death. Six months ago. There was a car crash, fire, an explosion. And in his will he wanted to be cremated and have his ashes scattered. But if he’s still alive, it means we’re still married, and I have reason to believe he’s moved in with a woman. Do you have anything to drink?”

I had a bottle in my desk drawer but it was full of spare change.

“What exactly do you want me to do?” I asked.

“Mmmm maybe something like this,” she said. She leaned over my desk and pressed her full lips against mine. After at least a full minute, we pulled apart, both of us grinning.

“Thank you for finding my husband,” she said. “And happy anniversary.”

“What anniversary?” I asked.

“You moved into this office two years ago, remember?” she said with another grin.

“Oh, yeah, right…” I said. I’d been busy and it had slipped my mind. “Where did you get the outfit?” I asked, looking at the flowered red hat, the feathered red boa and the slinky red dress, oh that slinky red dress…

“This old thing? I hardly wear it anymore,” she said flicking the boa in the air. “Theater wardrobe room. I’ve done favors for them; they did this one for me.”

“I think I may close up early,” I said. The Lady in Red grinned again.

As we walked into the hallway, she was singing a tune I’d never heard before:

“Then a gentleman dapper

Stepped out of the…phone booth

And…”

“What is that?” I asked.

“I don’t know,” she said, “but it’s the only other song I know that mentions a lady in red.”

 

—end—

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In a Fog with Friday Flash Fics for March 22, 2019 by Jeff Baker

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                            McGuffin and the London Peril

By Jeff Baker

Delmar and I were waiting on a cab and made the mistake of going back into the clubroom and old Plunkett asked about the fog.

“That fog out there is nothing,” the voice came from the far chair. “The fog some years ago caused people to disappear.”

McGuffin sat in his regular chair and sipped his whiskey. We couldn’t stop him from talking so we sat down and listened.

I was a much younger man (McGuffin said) and eager for adventure. So, when the third man, this time an MP vanished in the fog, the authorities called me, based on my work with Intelligence. There were no signs of foul play, except three people were gone. The MP had been seen last just a few blocks away from the Houses of Parliament, umbrella in hand. No trace had been found. I realized three other things the men had in common: They were male, they were unmarried and they were alone at the time they were last seen. There was another man, Kensington, who had said he had, well, felt something when he was out in the same area at the same time in an earlier evening. As I remember we had quite the time questioning him. Kensington was deaf as a post and too vain to use his hearing aid.

And that was when I realized what was happening.

I outlined my suspicions to the other investigators; one of the legendary Sirens, such as Jason and the Argonauts had faced. This one only seemed to affect the unmarried, but the solution was simple; no unmarried male should go walking in the area except in the company of a married man or a woman. Small marching bands were placed around the streets to drown out the Siren’s song. And we needed do this only until the weather changed.

McGuffin paused and finished his whiskey.

“The weather?” I asked. “What about the weather?”

“The same unseasonably warm currents that had helped bring the fog had brought the Siren with it from the area of the Pillars of Hercules. When the water cooled, the Siren left. Ahh!”

McGuffin’s reaction was to the waiter bringing a plate of sole and another whiskey.

“This fish,” McGuffin said, “is far less dangerous.”

—end—

Posted in Fantasy, Fiction, Friday Flash Fics, McGuffin, Mystery, Short-Stories, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

“Nothing Annoys Them So Much,” Friday Flash Fics by Jeff Baker for March 15, 2019.

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Nothing Annoys Them So Much

By Jeff Baker

 

The tree was still there at the edge of town and whenever I saw it, the memories would come back, memories of a summer afternoon when I was ten years old in 1882.

It was early summer and not too warm for Kansas and so the men were playing their weekly game of base-ball and watching this was my own weekly fun. We had the usual group standing (and in some cases sitting) around and watching the play of the game and I was standing in the shade of the big tree, wishing I was old and big enough to play with my father, my oldest brother Samuel and Dillard Jellicoe who everyone said was built like a bull. There was one newcomer to the audience for the game, the man who had stayed at Mayor Everett’s house after giving some talk at the church the night before. He was supposed to be famous but I hadn’t heard of him. He was wearing a long black coat, pressed black pants (Sam told me he had worn knee-breeches at his talk the night before) and a white shirt. He had a longish nose, black hair down to his shoulders and he carried an umbrella which he was using to protect himself from the sun. I crept closer, wondering why he simply didn’t stand under the shade of the tree but I overheard him say he wanted to see what he called “the new spectacle.” He was watching intently, however.

Someone pointed Dillard Jellicoe out to him and he nodded referring to “the loud young man who had been asked to leave” during the stranger’s talk the previous evening. I saw Jellicoe eyeing the stranger and his face reminded me of an angry bull.

The game had reached the height of play when Jellicoe suddenly ran across the field, directly at the stranger, the other players being occupied at third base and home plate. Jellicoe let out a loud yell and jumped at the stranger and I closed my eyes.

I heard a loud thud. Two of them really.

I opened my eyes. Someone was lying there in the dirt, and the stranger was standing over him, his feet spread, his arm outstretched, fist clenched.

“I boxed a bit while I was at University in Dublin,” the stranger said.

I made sure I was there that evening when the stranger caught the train. He bowed to the small crowd on the railway platform (Dillard Jellicoe conspicuously not among them) and then announced “Always forgive your enemies. Nothing annoys them so much.” He turned to where I was standing and winked. “Except maybe a fist to the jaw!”

 

—end—

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The Library Dancer—Friday Flash Fics by Jeff Baker (On Saturday again!) March 9, 2019

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The Library Dancer

By Jeff Baker

 

The young woman pirouetted around the tall bookcases in spite of wearing high heels, her dress flowing around her legs like an upside down flower.

Crouched behind a low bookcase, the two men stared and the one whispered to the other.

“There, Basil,” said the shorter of the two. “Perfect specimen of a Library Dancer!”

“And a female!” Basil replied, whispering. “Note the newsprint pattern of the dress.”

“Notice something else,” Willie replied. “She’s in a bookstore, not a library. That’s rare!”

“Almost unheard of,” Basil said.

The two men watched as the Dancer moved from one section of the bookstore to another, executing one graceful move after the other; now a pas de dux, now a swirl, now something bringing to mind Pavlova’s Swan.

“Remember the one we had to run out of the Brooksdale Library?” Basil whispered. “A male exotic dancer!”

“Oh, yes!” Willie said. “Half the men were titillated, the other were jealous!”

“And then there’s the pair in the Notre Dame Library. Not many places have a pair.”

“Rather incongruous having a pair of square dancers, but they don’t seem to bother anyone,” Willie added. “Oooo! Look what she’s doing now!”

The Dancer was balanced on the tall ladder the employees used to reach the high shelves, hopping from one rung to the next, ever higher. Then, she looked down and realized she was being observed. There was a sudden whoosh of air and Basil turned his head just in time to catch a last glimpse of the Dancer zipping behind the books on a high shelf.

“Some of them,” Basil observed, “are shy.”

 

—end—

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